By
Caroline McCarthy
Tuesday, August 08 2006 11:14 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39380407,00.htm
Virtualization software manufacturer VMware has announced a product
designed to enable Mac OS X users to run multiple PC operating systems
simultaneously without needing to reboot the computer.
VMware says its yet-to-be-named software, which is scheduled
to be presented on Monday at Apple
Computer's Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, lets a
Macintosh computer simultaneously run Linux, Sun Microsystems' Solaris and
Novell's NetWare, in addition to Microsoft's Windows XP. Users can access the
operating systems by clicking on designated tabs, and files can be moved between
systems via drag-and-drop functions, according to VMware.
VMware is by no means the only recent entrant into the field of
virtualization software that accommodates side-by-side access to different
operating systems. In June, start-up Parallels
introduced a product that enables a variety of operating systems to run alongside Mac applications and
appear to users as a separate window within Mac OS X. Even Microsoft has been
exploring opportunities in virtualization, collaborating
with start-up XenSource to investigate the possibilities of permitting XP
users to run Linux.
Windows compatibility with Macintosh machines is expected to be a hot topic
at the WWDC event, as it has been since the technology was made possible
with the introduction of Intel-based Macs. It has already been announced that
Apple's own Boot
Camp software, which permits the installation of Windows on Macs--albeit
with rebooting required to switch between the Mac and Windows systems--will be
part of its so-called Leopard operating system.
Since VMware's offering has not yet been released to beta testers, it is
unclear how it will match up to products like Parallels in stability or speed.
Additionally, there has been no word on its compatibility with XP successor Windows
Vista, now slated for a January debut.